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Abstract

This document describes a way to add origin authentication, message integrity, and replay resistance to HTTP REST requests. It is intended to be used over the HTTPS protocol.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (c) 2011 Joyent, Inc. and the persons identified as document authors. All rights reserved.

Code Components extracted from this document must include MIT License text.

Introduction

This protocol is intended to provide a standard way for clients to sign HTTP requests. RFC2617 (HTTP Authentication) defines Basic and Digest authentication mechanisms, and RFC5246 (TLS 1.2) defines client-auth, both of which are widely employed on the Internet today. However, it is common place that the burdens of PKI prevent web service operators from deploying that methodology, and so many fall back to Basic authentication, which has poor security characteristics.

Additionally, OAuth provides a fully-specified alternative for authorization of web service requests, but is not (always) ideal for machine to machine communication, as the key acquisition steps (generally) imply a fixed infrastructure that may not make sense to a service provider (e.g., symmetric keys).

Several web service providers have invented their own schemes for signing HTTP requests, but to date, none have been placed in the public domain as a standard. This document serves that purpose. There are no techniques in this proposal that are novel beyond previous art, however, this aims to be a simple mechanism for signing these requests.

Signature Authentication Scheme

The "signature" authentication scheme is based on the model that the client must authenticate itself with a digital signature produced by either a private asymmetric key (e.g., RSA) or a shared symmetric key (e.g., HMAC). The scheme is parameterized enough such that it is not bound to any particular key type or signing algorithm. However, it does explicitly assume that clients can send an HTTP Date header.

Authorization Header

The client is expected to send an Authorization header (as defined in RFC 2617) with the following parameterization:

credentials := "Signature" params
params := 1#(keyId | algorithm | [headers] | [ext] | signature)
digitalSignature := plain-string

keyId := "keyId" "=" <"> plain-string <">
algorithm := "algorithm" "=" <"> plain-string <">
headers := "headers" "=" <"> 1#headers-value <">
ext := "ext" "=" <"> plain-string <">
signature := "signature" "=" <"> plain-string <">

headers-value := plain-string
plain-string   = 1*( %x20-21 / %x23-5B / %x5D-7E )

Signature Parameters

keyId

REQUIRED. The keyId field is an opaque string that the server can use to look up the component they need to validate the signature. It could be an SSH key fingerprint, an LDAP DN, etc. Management of keys and assignment of keyId is out of scope for this document.

algorithm

REQUIRED. The algorithm parameter is used if the client and server agree on a non-standard digital signature algorithm. The full list of supported signature mechanisms is listed below.

headers

OPTIONAL. The headers parameter is used to specify the list of HTTP headers used to sign the request. If specified, it should be a quoted list of HTTP header names, separated by a single space character. By default, only one HTTP header is signed, which is the Date header. Note that the list MUST be specified in the order the values are concatenated together during signing. To include the HTTP request line in the signature calculation, use the special request-line value. While this is overloading the definition of headers in HTTP linguism, the request-line is defined in RFC 2616, and as the outlier from headers in useful signature calculation, it is deemed simpler to simply use request-line than to add a separate parameter for it.

extensions

OPTIONAL. The extensions parameter is used to include additional information which is covered by the request. The content and format of the string is out of scope for this document, and expected to be specified by implementors.

signature

REQUIRED. The signature parameter is a Base64 encoded digital signature generated by the client. The client uses the algorithm and headers request parameters to form a canonicalized signing string. This signing string is then signed with the key associated with keyId and the algorithm corresponding to algorithm. The signature parameter is then set to the Base64 encoding of the signature.

Signing String Composition

In order to generate the string that is signed with a key, the client MUST take the values of each HTTP header specified by headers in the order they appear.

  1. If the header name is not request-line then append the lowercased header name followed with an ASCII colon : and an ASCII space .
  2. If the header name is request-line then append the HTTP request line, otherwise append the header value.
  3. If value is not the last value then append an ASCII newline \n. The string MUST NOT include a trailing ASCII newline.

Example Requests

All requests refer to the following request (body omitted):

POST /foo HTTP/1.1
Host: example.org
Date: Tue, 07 Jun 2014 20:51:35 GMT
Content-Type: application/json
Digest: SHA-256=X48E9qOokqqrvdts8nOJRJN3OWDUoyWxBf7kbu9DBPE=
Content-Length: 18

The "rsa-key-1" keyId refers to a private key known to the client and a public key known to the server. The "hmac-key-1" keyId refers to key known to the client and server.

Default parameterization

The authorization header and signature would be generated as:

Authorization: Signature keyId="rsa-key-1",algorithm="rsa-sha256",signature="Base64(RSA-SHA256(signing string))"

The client would compose the signing string as:

date: Tue, 07 Jun 2014 20:51:35 GMT

Header List

The authorization header and signature would be generated as:

Authorization: Signature keyId="rsa-key-1",algorithm="rsa-sha256",headers="(request-target) date content-type digest",signature="Base64(RSA-SHA256(signing string))"

The client would compose the signing string as (+ "\n" inserted for readability):

(request-target) post /foo + "\n"
date: Tue, 07 Jun 2011 20:51:35 GMT + "\n"
content-type: application/json + "\n"
digest: SHA-256=Base64(SHA256(Body))

Algorithm

The authorization header and signature would be generated as:

Authorization: Signature keyId="hmac-key-1",algorithm="hmac-sha1",signature="Base64(HMAC-SHA1(signing string))"

The client would compose the signing string as:

date: Tue, 07 Jun 2011 20:51:35 GMT

Signing Algorithms

Currently supported algorithm names are:

  • rsa-sha1
  • rsa-sha256
  • rsa-sha512
  • dsa-sha1
  • hmac-sha1
  • hmac-sha256
  • hmac-sha512

Security Considerations

Default Parameters

Note the default parameterization of the Signature scheme is only safe if all requests are carried over a secure transport (i.e., TLS). Sending the default scheme over a non-secure transport will leave the request vulnerable to spoofing, tampering, replay/repudiation, and integrity violations (if using the STRIDE threat-modeling methodology).

Insecure Transports

If sending the request over plain HTTP, service providers SHOULD require clients to sign ALL HTTP headers, and the request-line. Additionally, service providers SHOULD require Content-MD5 calculations to be performed to ensure against any tampering from clients.

Nonces

Nonces are out of scope for this document simply because many service providers fail to implement them correctly, or do not adopt security specifications because of the infrastructure complexity. Given the header parameterization, a service provider is fully enabled to add nonce semantics into this scheme by using something like an x-request-nonce header, and ensuring it is signed with the Date header.

Clock Skew

As the default scheme is to sign the Date header, service providers SHOULD protect against logged replay attacks by enforcing a clock skew. The server SHOULD be synchronized with NTP, and the recommendation in this specification is to allow 300s of clock skew (in either direction).

Required Headers to Sign

It is out of scope for this document to dictate what headers a service provider will want to enforce, but service providers SHOULD at minimum include the Date header.

References

Normative References

  • [RFC2616] Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1
  • [RFC2617] HTTP Authentication: Basic and Digest Access Authentication
  • [RFC5246] The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2

Informative References

Name: Mark Cavage (editor)
Company: Joyent, Inc.
Email: mark.cavage@joyent.com
URI: http://www.joyent.com

Appendix A - Test Values

The following test data uses the RSA (1024b) keys, which we will refer to as keyId=Test in the following samples:

-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKBgQDCFENGw33yGihy92pDjZQhl0C3
6rPJj+CvfSC8+q28hxA161QFNUd13wuCTUcq0Qd2qsBe/2hFyc2DCJJg0h1L78+6
Z4UMR7EOcpfdUE9Hf3m/hs+FUR45uBJeDK1HSFHD8bHKD6kv8FPGfJTotc+2xjJw
oYi+1hqp1fIekaxsyQIDAQAB
-----END PUBLIC KEY-----

-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----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-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

And all examples use this request:

POST /foo?param=value&pet=dog HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
Date: Thu, 05 Jan 2014 21:31:40 GMT
Content-Type: application/json
Digest: SHA-256=X48E9qOokqqrvdts8nOJRJN3OWDUoyWxBf7kbu9DBPE=
Content-Length: 18

{"hello": "world"}

Default

The string to sign would be:

date: Thu, 05 Jan 2014 21:31:40 GMT

The Authorization header would be:

Authorization: Signature keyId="Test",algorithm="rsa-sha256",headers="date",signature="jKyvPcxB4JbmYY4mByyBY7cZfNl4OW9HpFQlG7N4YcJPteKTu4MWCLyk+gIr0wDgqtLWf9NLpMAMimdfsH7FSWGfbMFSrsVTHNTk0rK3usrfFnti1dxsM4jl0kYJCKTGI/UWkqiaxwNiKqGcdlEDrTcUhhsFsOIo8VhddmZTZ8w="

All Headers

Parameterized to include all headers, the string to sign would be (+ "\n" inserted for readability):

(request-target): post /foo?param=value&pet=dog
host: example.com
date: Thu, 05 Jan 2014 21:31:40 GMT
content-type: application/json
digest: SHA-256=X48E9qOokqqrvdts8nOJRJN3OWDUoyWxBf7kbu9DBPE=
content-length: 18

The Authorization header would be:

Authorization: Signature keyId="Test",algorithm="rsa-sha256",headers="(request-target) host date content-type digest content-length",signature="Ef7MlxLXoBovhil3AlyjtBwAL9g4TN3tibLj7uuNB3CROat/9KaeQ4hW2NiJ+pZ6HQEOx9vYZAyi+7cmIkmJszJCut5kQLAwuX+Ms/mUFvpKlSo9StS2bMXDBNjOh4Auj774GFj4gwjS+3NhFeoqyr/MuN6HsEnkvn6zdgfE2i0="

Generating and verifying signatures using openssl

The openssl commandline tool can be used to generate or verify the signatures listed above.

Compose the signing string as usual, and pipe it into the the openssl dgst command, then into openssl enc -base64, as follows:

$ printf 'date: Thu, 05 Jan 2014 21:31:40 GMT' | \
  openssl dgst -binary -sign /path/to/private.pem -sha256 | \
  openssl enc -base64
jKyvPcxB4JbmYY4mByyBY7cZfNl4OW9Hp...
$

The -sha256 option is necessary to produce an rsa-sha256 signature. You can select other hash algorithms such as sha1 by changing this argument.

To verify a signature, first save the signature data, Base64-decoded, into a file, then use openssl dgst again with the -verify option:

$ echo 'jKyvPcxB4JbmYY4mByy...' | openssl enc -A -d -base64 > signature
$ printf 'date: Thu, 05 Jan 2014 21:31:40 GMT' | \
  openssl dgst -sha256 -verify /path/to/public.pem -signature ./signature
Verified OK
$

Generating and verifying signatures using sshpk-sign

You can also generate and check signatures using the sshpk-sign tool which is included with the sshpk package in npm.

Compose the signing string as above, and pipe it into sshpk-sign as follows:

$ printf 'date: Thu, 05 Jan 2014 21:31:40 GMT' | \
  sshpk-sign -i /path/to/private.pem
jKyvPcxB4JbmYY4mByyBY7cZfNl4OW9Hp...
$

This will produce an rsa-sha256 signature by default, as you can see using the -v option:

sshpk-sign: using rsa-sha256 with a 1024 bit key

You can also use sshpk-verify in a similar manner:

$ printf 'date: Thu, 05 Jan 2014 21:31:40 GMT' | \
  sshpk-verify -i ./public.pem -s 'jKyvPcxB4JbmYY...'
OK
$